• No se han encontrado resultados

SEPTEMBER

In document PDF PROGRAMME BOOK - copernic.udg.edu (página 150-155)

732 EUROPEAN RESEARCH COUNCIL FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES FOR YOU

FRIDAY 1 SEPTEMBER

8:30 -

10:30 11:00 -

13:00 14:00 -

16:00 16:30 - 18:30

College Park 6 G026

202. Using Earthen Architecture as an Excuse: Productive and Social Practices in Prehistoric and Protohistoric Building College

Park 6 1035

601. Weaving Archaeology, Art and

Literature: Narratives & Representations 304. Different Stories for Different Peo- ple? Shaping Narratives:

From Individ- ual Research Sites to Major Infrastructure Projects College

Park 6 1037

685. Re-integrating the Environmental Archaeology of Europe’s ‘Wet’ and ‘Dry’ Neo- lithic Landscapes

Elmwood Building Geography G006

165. Building under and above Ground during European Neo- lithic

265. How is art seen?

Perception and Thought in Prehistoric Art

Elmwood Building Geography G029

557. The Sediment as an Artefact: Interpreting Human Behaviour and Activities through Geoarchaeological Analysis

395. MERC Forum: Com- parative Island Archaeologies in Medieval Europe Elmwood

Building Geography G033

389. Roundtable Session of the EAA Community on the Illicit Trade in Cultural Material

403. Skills for

the Future? 374. Weav- ing Global Standards for Archaeolo- gy: Universal Guidance Looms

8:30 -

10:30 11:00 -

13:00 14:00 -

16:00 16:30 - 18:30

Graduate School TR2

185. The Agency of Value in Archaeological

Heritage 392. Peaks

of Data - Collecting, Managing and Analysing Archaeologi- cal Data from Mountain Landscapes Graduate

School TR6

443. Cli- mate Change Adaptation in the Past and Solutions for the Future

338. Settling Waterscapes in Europe II: Prehis- toric Submerged Sites in Lakes, Bogs and Rivers - Part 1

Graduate School TR7

305. Weaving and Wear- ing Narratives of Identity.

Production, Trade, and Consumption of Textiles and Personal Jewellery as Markers of Identities

529. Beyond Identities:

Crafting Information in the Old World from the Bronze Age until the Late 1st Mil- lennium BCE

Lanyon Building G024

331. The Experience of Stone: Materiality, Landscape, Expression

Lanyon Building G036

441. Cave Concerns:

Methodological and The- oretical Developments in Cave Archaeology

539. New Research in Roman Ritual: Objects and Temple Sites

8:30 -

10:30 11:00 -

13:00 14:00 -

16:00 16:30 - 18:30

Lanyon Building G059

107. The Materiality of Lived Religion on the Atlantic Edge

248. Archae- ology and the Climate Crisis:

Resilience, Activism, and Pedagogy

711. FAIR Reuse of Archive Data

712. What to Do with Your Code? Tools and Best Practices for the Long-term Sustainability of Code Outputs in Archaeology Lanyon

Building G074

12. Modern Approaches to the Study of Landscape Improve- ment and the Creation of Sus- tainable Agricultural Systems

327. Variations on ‘the Islamic’:

Alternatives, Resistance and Contestation in Islamic Archaeology

Lanyon Building 1002

195. Far away, so Close - The Current Debates about Post-medieval Cemeteries in Anthropolog- ical and Archaeological Studies

Lanyon Building 1052

730. Interdisciplinary Perspectives into Roman Commerce, Economy and the Acquisition of New Tastes during the Roman Period from the 4th Century BC Onwards

Main Site Tower 2002

710. Archaeological Approaches to Human Perception: Methods and Practice

113. Byzantine Heritage in Peril:

The Safety of Archaeological Sites (Heritage, Conservation, Preservation, Non-Destructive Methodologies)

Main Site Tower 2003

256. Pleistocene Lithic Raw Materials Characterization to Interpret Mobility Patterns and Settlements Dynamics

696. Cloth Cultures in and beyond Viking Age

8:30 -

10:30 11:00 -

13:00 14:00 -

16:00 16:30 - 18:30

Main Site Tower 2006

707. Open Access Re- mote Sensing Data in Cul- tural Heritage Management, Archaeologi- cal Research, and Citizen Science

572. There Is More that Unites Us, than Divides Us. Taking Strategic, Collaborative Approaches to Managing and Delivering Archaeology

476. A Matter of Time. Handling Chronological Data in Archae- ology

Maths and Physics G006

458. Intertwined Technologies in

Prehistoric Europe 702. Interdisciplinary Integration in Reconstructing Agricultural Crop Histories

Maths and Physics G014

181. Science, not Scientism, in Experimental Archaeology

390. Methods and Mod- els for the Study of Hu- man-Birds Relationships Maths and

Physics G017

323. Calabria beyond the Classical Period: The Longue Durée of a Medi- terranean Region

728. Urban Phenomena in Archaeological Sites-Issues Related to Traits, Homogeneity, Diversity and Sustainability Maths and

Physics G018

378. The Mushroom Speaks: An Archaeology of Fungi Entan- glements Music

Building 1017

555. All These Finds – Chal- lenges and Possibilities on Large Urban Archaeological Excava- tions

364. Archaeology of the Limes - Roman Settlements and Roman Military Presence on the Margins of the Empire

Music Building Harty

370. Reflecting on Digital Practice in Heri- tage Narratives

8:30 -

10:30 11:00 -

13:00 14:00 -

16:00 16:30 - 18:30

Music Building McMordie

621. ’Specialisation, Standardi- sation and Diversity’: Re-exam- ining the Role of Mass Produc- tion in Archaeology

139. Climate Change, Human Impact and the Challenges of Assessing the Sustainability of

Archaeological Heritage New Physics

Building Bell

612. Living and Dying in the Middle Ages:

Bioarcheological Approaches to Health, Dis- ease, and Disability

New Physics Building Larmor

398. Body Ideals and Ideal Bodies: Materi- alities of Aesthetics and Their Social Role in Non-Literate Societies

Old Physics Building Emeleus

320. A Controlled Vocabulary for Archaeology:

A Necessary Requirement for the Development of a Sustainable Research Practice into the 21st Century

563. Shaping Archaeology through Ethical and Commu- nity-led Activ- ist Practices One

Elmwood Blue Sky

111. Mirroring Worlds: Rural Do- mestic Spaces through Multidis- ciplinarity in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages

236. Early Medieval Towns in Europe: Between Legacy of the Roman Empire and “Barbarian”

Culture?

One Elmwood Cube

542. Reconstructing Biological Relatedness and Inferring Hu- man Relations in the Past

143. Defining Site Functions in the Viking World: Weaving Nar- ratives from Disparate Strands of Evidence

8:30 -

10:30 11:00 -

13:00 14:00 -

16:00 16:30 - 18:30

Peter Froggatt Centre G007

102. Mesolithic-Neolithic Transitions 666. Pros- pecting Pre- historic Land Use and its Environment:

Challenges and Perspectives for Investigat- ing Lifeways of Hunter Gath- erers and Early Farmers Peter

Froggatt Centre G024

574. It Takes a Village: Interdis- ciplinary Bioarchaeological Re- search on the Role of Children in the Past

401. Biological Profiling of Cremated Individuals: Current Methodological Approaches and Limitations

Peter Froggatt Centre 2011

682. A Glimpse into the Inequalities along the Margins: Surplus Economy, Technologi- cal Change and Trade in the Western Mediter- ranean Hinterlands

359. Positionality in the Archaeology of Mobility and Identity

Peter Froggatt Centre 2013

456. Same but Different: Im- itations in the Archaeological Record

530. Eurasia before and after the 8.2 ka BP Event – A Signifi- cant Horizon of Cultural Change?

8:30 -

10:30 11:00 -

13:00 14:00 -

16:00 16:30 - 18:30

Peter Froggatt Centre 2017

279. Commodity, Container, Consumption – European Stoneware between Regional and Global Trade Systems

234. Artefacts’

Residue Anal- yses as a Tool for Decoding Past Daily Life Peter

Froggatt Centre 2018

230. What Makes a Settlement? Comparative Perspectives on Settlement Structures and Pat- terns from Neolithic to Iron Age

Peter Froggatt Centre 2025

90. Setting Archaeological Heritage Policy at the European Level: Putting It into the Hands of Archaeologists

438. Timber Buildings in Medieval and Post-medieval Europe

Peter Froggatt Centre 2026

298. Companions, Competitors, Fellow Travelers – Biomolecular and Zooarchaeological Evidence of Human-Carnivore Interactions in the Past Peter

Froggatt Centre 3005

361. Weaving Big Data for

the Digital Middle Ages 611. Heritage Goes to School. The Importance of Archaeological Dissemina- tion in Education

Peter Froggatt Centre 3006A

366. Megaliths and Graph- ical Markers in Landscape:

New Techniques of Docu- mentation

614. Food Culture(s) of Neolithic Southeastern Europe: Culinary Traditions, Cuisine and Pottery Peter

Froggatt Centre 3006B

560. Investigating Past Human Mobilities through Natural Resources Ex- ploitation: Latest Results and Developments

485. The Imprint of Wean- ing: New Methods to Ap- proach Early Life Nutritional Conditions

Peter Froggatt Centre 3011

524. New Narratives in In- dustrial Heritage: Exploring Alternative Approaches to the Industrial Past

315. Nean- derthals in Mediterranean Landscapes

606. Hearth and Home:

Diachronic Approaches to the Archaeo- logical Record

FRIDAY1 September

8:30 -

10:30 11:00 -

13:00 14:00 -

16:00 16:30 - 18:30

Peter Froggatt Centre 3012

568. Beyond Bean Count- ing: Current, Emerging and Anticipated Approaches to Benefitting People and Places through Archaeology

491. Atlantic Connections in the First Millennium AD: Ceram- ics, Trade and Anything Else?

578. Between the East and the West.

Çatalhöyük’

Contribution to the Euro- pean Neolithic and European Archaeological Thought Peter

Froggatt Centre 3017

567. Animals Make Identi- ties: How People Expressed Their Social Affinities in the Stone Age?

480. Metals and Metalworking I – Archaeometallurgical Narra- tives of the Copper and Bronze Ages

Queen’s FilmTheatre G009

334. (In)visible Women in History of Archaeology

Queen’s FilmTheatre 1006

521. (Re)-thinking Small.

Bladelets and Microlithic Productions before the Onset of the Upper Palae- olithic and Later Stone Age

346. Blast from the Glass:

Provenance, Occurrence, Cor- rosion and Preservation (Late Bronze Age to Pre-Roman Times)

Queen’s FilmTheatre Screen 1

164. Coastal Archaeology in Small Islands:

Research Perceptions, Biases, Methods and Approaches

Queen’s FilmTheatre Screen 2

437. Current research in the Americas

New Physics Building Larmor

13:00 - 14:00 Keynote lecture by Vasil Rozhko

HeMo lab: A Platform for Monitoring and Reconception of Cultural Heritage of Ukraine

18:45 - 20:15 Annual Membership Business Meeting

8:30 -

10:30 11:00 -

13:00 14:00 -

16:00 16:30 - 18:30

University Square 6 G006

729. EXARC: Reconstructing Past Narratives

Through Experimental Archaeology 520. What Now, Theoret- ical Archaeol- ogy? Thinking Theory in the Fourth Scien- tific Revolution University

Square 22 1005

687. Historical Archaeology or the Material History of the Modernity:

Experiencing Landscapes around the Fours Corners of the World

400. No Movement, No Trading, Simply Local:

Creating Narratives around Local Resources in Prehistory

1 September FRIDAY

FRIDAY 1 September

306 307

12 MODERN APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF LANDSCAPE

In document PDF PROGRAMME BOOK - copernic.udg.edu (página 150-155)

Documento similar